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node bench

A little utility for doing side-by-side benchmarks in nodejs.

This is not for benchmarking your HTTP servers. Use ab for that.

Installation

npm install bench

Usage

Write your script like this:

exports.compare = {
  "function wrapper" : function () {
    var x = (function (a) {
      return a;
    })("foo");
  },
  "with(){} wrapper" : function () {
    var x;
    with ({a : "foo"}) {
      x = a;
    }
  }
  "no wrapper" : function () {
    var a = "foo";
    var x = a;
  }
};
require("bench").runMain()

Then, start it up with node.

$ node my-test-script.js

It'll output the scores in processes/ms, so a higher score is always better. That is, the values are kHz, not Hz.

You can also export time, count, and comparecount to change the behavior slightly.

Your test script is just a plain old commonjs module, so it can include other things, update require.paths, whatever setup you need to do. Generally, it's a good idea to do this stuff in the module itself, rather than in the comparison functions, so that you can better isolate the units that you want to test.

Fields

Export the following fields from your benchmark script.

compare - The hash of functions that will be compared. The output will use the object key as the title. They're called without any arguments, in the default scope. It's assumed that you should know how to make this do whatever you need it to.

time - How long (in ms) to run the tests for. A higher value will result in more accurate tests that take longer to run. Default: 1000

compareCount - How many times to do the test runs. This should be some fairly small number. Tests are run multiple times in varying order to average out the variation due to calling one function first, a primed cache, garbage collection, etc. Higher value = more accurate, slower tests. Default: 8

countPerLap - Especially when doing asynchronous benchmarking, you may want to structure your functions so that they run a bunch of times before continuing. In these cases, to make your scores reflect the actual number of processes per ms, indicate the number of runs per call in the "countPerLap" field. Default: 1

done - A function that will be called with the results of the runs when they're complete. By default, this calls a function that will analyze the results a bit and write the data to stdout.

Asynchronous Benchmarking

Just write your functions so that they take a single argument. That argument is your callback. Have fun with it.

Your callback will be fired using process.nextTick. This has a wee bit of overhead, so if you're testing something really fast, you should probably construct it to run many times before calling the callback. Check the examples/nexttick-vs-settimeout.js test for an example.

WARNING!

Statistics are powerful tools, and in the wrong hands, can lead to a lot of mayhem. Please use this tool for good, and not evil.

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